NDSU professor uses equine therapy to help troubled children

SENTINEL BUTTE, N.D. — A North Dakota State University professor is using horses to help modify the behavior of children with troubled backgrounds, and it seems to be working.
Erika Berg, an assistant professor for NDSU’s equine studies program, has teamed up with the child care facility Home on the Range, near Sentinel Butte. She has collected data since 2008 that could provide evidence that equine-assisted therapy can help children better than traditional therapy, according to a news release.

Erika Berg (left) participates in a therapeutic horsemanship course with students at Shipley Horse Farm, as part of the North Dakota State University equine studies program. The NDSU assistant professor of equine studies is collecting data at the Home on the Range near Sentinel Butte to see if it can help modify the behavior of children with troubled backgrounds.

SENTINEL BUTTE, N.D. — A North Dakota State University professor is using horses to help modify the behavior of children with troubled backgrounds, and it seems to be working.

Erika Berg, an assistant professor for NDSU’s equine studies program, has teamed up with the child care facility Home on the Range, near Sentinel Butte. She has collected data since 2008 that could provide evidence that equine-assisted therapy can help children better than traditional therapy, according to a news release.

“I’ve seen that my entire life that I’ve been involved with it, just all of these incredible things that are happening,” Berg says. “But we need to figure out a way to document that, so it can be validated with the medical community … for different acceptance for an alternative treatment, but one that works.”

Using horses in mental health treatment is a field of study that is relatively new, Berg says. It is something that has been developed in the past 15 years. She has been involved with equine science for 20 years, and when she got to NDSU in 2008, she wanted to try to find a way to use her love for horses to help others.

Study specifics

The study begins when Berg and Home on the Range employees assess children admitted to the facility. The researchers identify children with negative or problematic behaviors — such as lying, aggression and defiance — directed toward their surroundings, Berg says.

Berg studies children ages 12 to 19 for 12 weeks, though the students stay in the program for the duration of their stay, says Mike Gooch, Home on the Range clinical director. The facility with a working ranch has had horse classes for students, but there has never been anything this extensive.

“It was more of meet once a week and do something with the kids,” Gooch says. “We have developed that and structured it and designed some program outcomes with the help of Erika. We have really taken it to the next level.”

The study compares those tendencies to before and after their time in the program. Berg also compares the results with students that go through traditional therapy, such as talking with a therapist.

Children spend three hours with horses, three nights a week, Gooch says. The classes range from observing the animals to grooming. The students, if they feel comfortable, might even try their skills at riding around the arena.

“We have kids that are really scared to death of horses,” Gooch says. “We had one girl that came in, and she wouldn’t even get into the pasture with the horses. Now she rides.”

The preliminary results indicate behaviors were normalized in all areas, Berg says, adding they saw less of a dramatic change for those in traditional therapy.

“The kids, they are put in a position where they have to make decisions, and they run that group themselves,” he adds.

The program has come a long way, Gooch says. Laura Feldmann, a clinical social worker at the facility, has also helped with the study and will speak on it at the National Association of Social Workers Conference in July in Washington, D.C.

“I think the work that is being done at Home on the Range is outstanding,” Berg says.

The treatment can be expensive, Berg says. Horses require maintenance, housing and feeding. But it is therapy that should be considered.

“It’s certainly not for everyone,” she says. “But for those individuals it is appropriate for, the benefits are quite remarkable.”

Gooch says they should finish up the study by the end of the year, but he hopes to continue the program.

“This program has really become a signature program here,” Gooch says, adding that Berg’s assistance has been phenomenal.

“We would like this program to be something that we can replicate and possibly be tweaked to be used with other populations, such as kids with trauma or depression,” he says.